Saturday, October 25, 2014

Waiting For The Kaboom



BAMAKO (Reuters) - Nurses and other people who have come into contact with the first Ebola patient in Mali were isolated on Friday as concerns mounted that an epidemic that has killed 4,900 people in neighbouring West African states could take hold in the country.
Mali confirmed its first case of Ebola on Thursday and said the two-year-old girl was being treated in the western town of Kayes. She was brought by relatives from neighbouring Guinea, where the epidemic was detected in March, after her mother died of the disease.
On the dusty streets of the capital Bamako, residents voiced alarm after health officials said the girl had spent 10 days in the city's Bagadadji district before travelling on Sunday to Kayes, some 400 km to the northwest near the Senegalese border.
Diplomatic sources also expressed concern about the preparedness of the poor nation to contain an outbreak that has ravaged three neighbouring countries. Mali, home to a large U.N. peacekeeping mission, is still battling northern Islamists after a brief French-led war last year.
One diplomatic source, briefed by authorities, said the girl was showing symptoms of the disease when she arrived in Kayes, three days before she was isolated for suspected Ebola.
Six nurses who treated the girl at a hospital in Kayes had been isolated for treatment, the source said, but noted it was not clear how quickly this was done. The girl first came for treatment on Monday but was not confirmed to have the disease until Thursday.
A further 26 contacts had been isolated at the CNAM national medical centre in Bamako, the source said.
A Malian Health Ministry official, who asked not to be identified, told Reuters that authorities estimated that at least 300 people had been in contact with the infected child.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said it was sending experts to help Mali fight the outbreak. The U.N. health agency says at least 4,877 people are recorded to have died from the epidemic - mostly in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone - though the actual death toll is likely to be several times higher.
Hours before Mali confirmed the case, WHO Assistant Director-General Keiji Fukuda said the agency had "reasonable confidence" that there was not widespread transmission of the Ebola virus into neighbouring countries.
Mali, together with cocoa producer Ivory Coast, has put in place border controls to stem the stop Ebola at its frontiers. However, a visit to Mali's border with Guinea by Reuters this month showed vehicles avoiding a health checkpoint set up by Malian authorities by simply driving through the bush.

So Mali, ater letting an infected girl and her now-infected relatives through their "quarantine" (big enough to drive an epidemic through), now has dozens of high-risk exposures, and hundreds of potential contacts. And apparently, also has a national IQ in the room-temperature range. For a patio. In Siberia.

Once again proving, precisely as I explained a couple of week back, that the fate of the world rests entirely upon the shoulders of the stupidest people involved, because with this outbreak, from NY to Mali, the morons are driving the bus.

Right off the cliff.

5 comments:

  1. CDC Revises things again:

    http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2014/10/cdc-yes-you-can-catch-ebola-from-being-sneezed-coughed-on-or-by-having-sex/

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  2. That's not a revision. It's a sop to the jackasses that don't understand what "Droplet Precautions" means (mainly in the news media, but also the rest of government), and who think you needed to roll around in their vomit to catch Ebola.

    It isn't a change at all, merely an acknowledgment of the abysmally low intelligence standards throughout the country. Including at the top levels of the CDC.

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  3. It takes a whole village to raise a child in Africa.
    That means everyone has a hand in the child's activities day and night.
    Is this the first majority Muslim Ebola contacted nation?

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  4. What effect if any do Muslim African funeral practices have on the spread of Ebola or not?

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  5. I don't know about African funeral practices, but water from dead bodies has great juju. It is used to wash vegetables and fruits for sale in the marketplace (it magically attracts customers) and to keep a husband from wandering. Really powerful juju. See:

    http://www.bulawayo24.com/index-id-news-sc-local-byo-55581.html

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